The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
gentle-sparrow-044

Head-on with a drunk driver left me frozen at intersections. Anyone else?

I don't really know how to start this so I'll just say it — I got hit head-on about four months ago and I'm still not okay.

It was a weekday afternoon, totally normal drive. I was maybe six minutes from my house on a two-lane county road I've taken a thousand times. There's a long straightaway through some low farmland where the sight lines aren't great because of overgrown ditches on both sides. I came around a gentle curve and there was a car — fully in my lane — drifting toward me.

I remember it in pieces. I had maybe two seconds. I remember thinking my dog was home alone. I remember noticing the other driver's head was down. I remember deciding to go right toward the ditch instead of left, and then the impact just... erased the next few minutes for me. I woke up with the airbag in my face and someone knocking on my window.

The other driver was arrested at the scene. DUI. It was 3pm on a Tuesday.

My car is totaled, I have a herniated disc they found on MRI, and physically I'm muddling through. But the mental part is what's wrecking me. I flinch at oncoming headlights. I white-knuckle every curve. My partner has to drive me to PT because I had a full panic attack on the highway last week.

Has anyone else dealt with this kind of anxiety after a crash? Does it actually get better? And also — does PTSD from an accident factor into any kind of claim, or is it just ignored because it's not a broken bone?

13replies

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13 replies

  • 6
    hearty-fox-883

    The panic attacks while driving — I lived that for almost a year after my crash. What helped me was honestly just naming it out loud to my doctor instead of pushing through. Once it was on record and I started seeing a trauma therapist, things slowly started to shift. It does get better but you kind of have to let yourself admit how bad it is first.

    • 8
      clever-elk-883

      Please don't minimize what you're experiencing. What you're describing — the hypervigilance, the flashbacks, the physical panic response — that's textbook acute stress response and it can absolutely develop into full PTSD if untreated. Get a referral to a trauma-informed therapist sooner rather than later. EMDR specifically has a strong track record for accident-related trauma. And keep every appointment documented. Your mental health treatment is part of your recovery, full stop.

    • 2
      calm-dreamer804

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 9
    clear-swift-621

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: psychological injury from a crash — diagnosed and treated — is absolutely compensable in a personal injury claim. The key word is documented. Therapist notes, diagnosis, treatment records. Jurors and adjusters both understand that getting slammed head-on by a drunk driver doesn't just hurt your back. Don't let anyone tell you the emotional damage 'doesn't count.'

  • 14
    keen-tern-140

    Watch out — adjusters will try to wrap up your claim fast, especially with a clear-liability DUI situation. They'll offer you something that sounds decent before you've even had time to understand the full scope of your injuries, including the mental health piece. Don't sign anything releasing your claims until you actually know what ongoing treatment is going to cost you.

    • 1
      weathered-mile-marker365

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

    • 1
      quiet-traveler607

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 14
    quick-wren-429

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest with you — psych damages were always the thing we tried hardest to lowball or exclude. The internal thinking was 'soft, hard to prove.' That's exactly why documentation matters so much. A therapist's written treatment plan and a formal diagnosis changes the whole conversation. Without paperwork it's your word; with paperwork it's a medical record.

  • 9
    wise-hare-598

    I'm so sorry. The part about your dog being home alone — that detail got me. Your brain went somewhere so human in that moment. Please be gentle with yourself. Four months isn't very long at all after something like that.

  • 6
    careful-badger-675

    I know it probably doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that you're identifying what's happening — naming the panic attacks, connecting it to the crash — means you're already ahead of a lot of people who just white-knuckle it and never get help. You're not broken, you're processing something genuinely traumatic.

    • 5
      thankful-sidewalk162

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 12
    swift-vole-290

    Two things: get a trauma therapist booked this week, not next month. And if you don't already have a PI attorney, get a free consult before you talk to the other driver's insurance again. DUI + head-on + herniated disc + psych injury is not a situation where you DIY the claim.

    • 2
      hopeful-commuter554

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.